Some interesting facts for all of you science lovers out there; all ten of you… TGO
Refer to story below. Source: SPACE.com
By Joe Rao, SPACE.com Skywatching Columnist, Space.com | Mon, Jul 4, 2011
The weather forecast for this year’s Fourth of July holiday in the United States calls for high temperatures across much of the country’s central and southern states, with some places expected to surpass 100 degrees for the American holiday. So it may come as a surprise that despite this heat, the planet is actually about as far away from the sun as it ever gets.
At about 11 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT) on the Fourth of July, the Earth will reach that point in its orbit where it is farthest from the sun. Called aphelion, this location in Earth’s orbit puts the planet about 94.5 million miles (152 million kilometers) from the sun. That’s about 3.1 million miles (4.9 million km) more than the Earth’s closest distance to the sun (called perihelion), which occurred on Jan. 3.
The exact difference in the distance between Earth’s closest and farthest points from the sun is 3,104,641 miles (4 996 435 km), or 3.28 percent, which makes a difference in radiant heat received by the planet of nearly 7 percent. The average distance between the Earth and sun is about 93 million miles (150 million km).
Closer doesn’t necessarily mean hotter
If you ask most people in the Northern Hemisphere which month of the year they think the Earth is closest to the sun, they may likely say it happens in June, July or August, some of the hottest months of the year.
But our warm weather doesn’t relate to our distance from the sun. It’s because of the 23.5-degree tilt of the Earth’s axis that the sun is above the horizon for different lengths of time at different seasons. The tilt determines whether the sun’s rays strike us at a low angle or more directly.
At New York’s latitude, the more nearly direct rays at the summer solstice of June 21 bring about three times as much heat as the more slanting rays at the winter solstice on Dec. 21. Heat received by any region is dependent on the length of daylight and the angle of the sun above the horizon.
So there are noticeable differences in temperatures that are registered over different parts of the world, including the Southern Hemisphere, where it is winter right now.
A climate fallacy
When I attended Henry Bruckner Junior High School in The Bronx, my earth science teacher, Mr. Shenberg, told all of us that because Earth is farthest from the sun in July and closest in December, that such a difference would tend to warm the winters and cool the summers … at least in the Northern Hemisphere.
And yet the truth of the matter is that the preponderance of large land masses in the Northern Hemisphere works the other way, and actually tends to make the winters colder and the summers hotter.
Interestingly, the times when the Earth lies at its closest and farthest points from the sun roughly coincide with two significant holidays. When Earth is closest to the sun around New Year’s Day and farthest from the sun around Independence Day.
Depending on the year, the date of perihelion can vary from Jan. 1 to 5, while the date of aphelion can vary from July 2 to July 6.
So while you’re out in the Fourth of July sun this holiday, take a moment to appreciate the celestial dance the Earth is making at the exact same time and enjoy the sunshine.
Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for The New York Times and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y.
This is great stuff. I did some research awhile back, to put together something like this myself, but I got hung up on the bit about the land masses causing greater extremes in the north. It still seems to me that larger land masses would take longer to heat up in the summer and to cool of in the winter. This seems to born out, at least anecdotally, by higher reported extremes in the south. Not to mention the fact that, in the south, the Earth actually is closer to the sun in the summer and further from the sun in the winter in addition to the change in the angle of arrival of the sun’s rays.
Oh, damn. My head is aching from the strain… again!
@IzaakMak Mak… Initially, I guess it was due to the combination of your alien looking gravatar and that I never made out that IzaakMak as two words, and quite unique ones, and also the fact that it seemed what was attracting you to this blog were the, “Picture of the Day” and the, “Hottie of the Week”, you know, the porn aspect and not its intellectual content, I kinda thought that you must be some sick fuck (BTW I am not using the word “porn” literally here as I an completely aware that the pics on this blog don’t even come close to fitting our definition of porn, but Mak knows what I mean, and I am not being judgmental because there are periods in my life that all I was doing was, “looking for that street corner girl”, now that’s porn and I love it) but I could not have been more wrong about you. Just read some of your blogs: “If You Really Must Know”, “…The True Calling”, “Just Don’t Get It, Eh?”, and “Too Big To Succeed?” and you my friend, are what I define as a free-thinking man. Dude, consider yourself lucky, maybe even blessed, cause you my friend, are getting much, much, incredibly much more, ice water than billions of us do, and ok, maybe you are not as much as some of us. No, this isn’t hell, What it is, is one big game – keep on playing it the way you have been.